Snarl in a sentence as a noun

That does hurt my brain, so I sometimes snarl.

Please, put your creative talent to good use on the web. Break free of the walled gardens that snarl and entrap you!

Cancelled the wallet account, and snarl "no" anytime google tries to get a credit card from me.

It is a snarl term of the first water, with no value except to express a negative emotion.

Negative but empty feelings are much more popular in the political sphere, where they're called snarl words.

Frequent events/protests/parades/festivals that snarl up traffic for no good reason whatsoever6.

Because I've seen too many places take that long slide from a little technical debt to an enormous low-productivity snarl.

Snarl in a sentence as a verb

Great coverage, but then the requirements change substantially and the test base is just a massive snarl of interdependent assumptions.

Welcome!We are committed to producing the finest "snackable entertainment" ever to clog a router or cause a traffic snarl.

The original headline reads "app maker uber hits regulatory snarl" - as in, encountering an obstacle.

If you'd like to explain how you believe that, I'm happy to listen, but my guess is that since you're using 'SJW' as a snarl-word you've read this entire thread through the filter of confirmation bias.

The only aspect of urban life that shuttle commuters are relatively immune from is the snarl of rush hour traffic, but on that front, they're part of the solution more than they're part of the problem.

Did the keyboard come with it originally?I find it odd that the cable wires soldered to the connector on the keyboard are not in the order the wires are on the cable, leading to a bit of a snarl.

When your math is a hideous snarl of abstract algebra and graph structures and your code includes a novel 3d dynamics engine and custom collision detection, it's exhilarating to see your simulated robot so much as twitch a finger in the right direction.

Snarl definitions

noun

a vicious angry growl

noun

an angry vicious expression

noun

something jumbled or confused; "a tangle of government regulations"

See also: tangle maze

verb

utter in an angry, sharp, or abrupt tone; "The sales clerk snapped a reply at the angry customer"; "The guard snarled at us"

See also: snap

verb

make a snarling noise or move with a snarling noise; "Bullets snarled past us"

verb

twist together or entwine into a confusing mass; "The child entangled the cord"

See also: entangle tangle

verb

make more complicated or confused through entanglements

See also: embrangle